But i want one that can take chokes. Must have chokes. 14" long barrel is my ideal length. Mag fed, tube fed, break action, doesnt matter. What have you found are the options out there?
Thanks
For screw in chokes straight out of the box, you're looking at the Turkish guns, mostly.
Corwin-Arms usually carries the "Warrior," "Asena," and "Sinsinati" brand shotguns (though it looks like he has limited stock at the moment), Westrifle carries the "Armed" brand.
As far as I can tell, the "Warrior" and "Armed" shotguns are coming from the same factory, just branded different for different importers. I have, 4 different "Warrior" shotguns from Corwin-Arms (shorty single shot break actions in 12 and .410, and their long barrelled brothers), and they've all been good, solid, reliable little guns, if not the fanciest things going.
I also have a couple of the "Sinsinati" shotguns, which have ejectors instead of extractors, and appear to be a big step up in quality and fit and finish from the "Warrior" guns, but possibly the same factory. Quite nice and still at a very good price.
I have an Asena ZR7 semi-auto, and it's a fantastic gun at the price they went for.
There's also the "Churchill" short shotguns, some come with chokes, some not. Again, Turkish made. Several different vendors. I've seen them around, and they look pretty decent.
Oh, and I almost forgot, I have one of the 12 gauge Ricol short O/U guns. Very well made, and takes chokes. I can't remember the patter, but it's a standard choke (bought a couple different ones back when I got the gun, since forgotten the pattern).
They pop up on the EE every now and then, but looks like it was a one time run of these and done. Expect to pay $600 or more for one of these, even used.
Some of my shorties:
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Don't let the Fudds dissuade you. These make for handy/useful truck and bush guns, effective for grouse etc. I'm very fond of my shorties, and am much more likely to grab one that one of my long barrelled shotguns. Just a lot handier.
Off to the black and green forum...
Probably get more interest there. Those types of shotguns are quite popular with the people shooting zombie targets.![]()
Nice shotys gelmar. I love the look of the ricol over/under.
Probably get more interest there. Those types of shotguns are quite popular with the people shooting zombie targets.![]()
Nice shotys gelmar. I love the look of the ricol over/under.
The Ricol shotguns look great and work very well. Nice tight operation and look and feel much better than a $600 shotgun should.Would also work well for deer in some of our shotgun with shot only zones.
The OP did not say he was planning to use this as a hunting/sporting platform. He just said he wanted a "shorty" shotgun.You know, the hidebound attitude in the hunting sections of this forum isn't doing anyone any favours. The OP is planning on using the shorty as a hunting/sporting platform, so why shouldn't the discussion reside in the hunting and sporting sub-fprum?
No one is trying to shut down the discussion but rather direct the OP to a forum where more knowledge and experience with these types of shotguns might be found. The OP didn't find the advice offensive as he repeated this thread there.The truth is, short shotguns are widely used as bush guns, farm guns, truck guns, etc., and can be very practical for a number of applications. The subset of this forum (and it isn't everyone in the H&S sub-forums, just a small number of very vocal people) that try and shut down any discussion of it, limits the knowledge pool that can be drawn from.
The Ricol is a very good gun. Better than it has a right to be at the price point. The ejectors aren't fond of cheap ammo with nickle/aluminum bases, but I can live with that. Friends don't let friends shoot Winchester White Box.
Slug performance was borderline acceptable. The barrels are well indexed, but it's tough to get better than about a 6"-8" group group at 50 yards. I'd like well under 5" at 50 yards for a deer slug gun. But I use rifles for deer anyway, so it isn't a major concern. Conceivably, you could put a slug in one barrel and shot in the other for certain applications. Usually when I'm deer hunting, we'll be set up in our hides in the morning and evening, and spend the day wandering around trying to russle up grouse. Having a slug in one barrel in case you spook a deer out if its day bed at close range could be good. Just have to remember which barrel is which, and hit the right trigger (which can be tough in the heat of the moment). Wouldn't do to hit a deer with bridshot, or vaporize a grouse with an HV slug.
The OP did not say he was planning to use this as a hunting/sporting platform. He just said he wanted a "shorty" shotgun.
No one is trying to shut down the discussion but rather direct the OP to a forum where more knowledge and experience with these types of shotguns might be found. The OP didn't find the advice offensive as he repeated this thread there.
And FYI the reason the shotgun forum was separated some years ago was the frequency of dumbass comments like "hidebound attitudes" and "don't let the Fudds dissuade you."




























